Mullahs continue persecution of Baha’is and women
 
 
The mullah regime continues to persecute women and the
Baha'i minority in Iran, as a report published by the Independent confirmed
that there is discrimination in the admission of women and Baha'is to Iranian
universities.
Journalist Amir Soltanzadeh said in his report, “Acceptance
based on discrimination continues to exist in the university admission process
in Iran,” adding, “Despite the low capacity of universities for girls, the head
of Iran’s National Organization of Educational Testing, Ebrahim Khodaei, stated
that girls make up 53% of the admissions. However, due to the large number of
girls' enrollment in the university recently, various government agencies have
emphasized the issue of gender segregation.”
Soltanzadeh cited a statement by Expediency Council member Ahmad
Tavakkoli in this regard, in which he said, “I support a system for determining
a gender quota, and if the composition is to be the demographic profile of
universities in this way, when we have educated women who have uneducated
suitors, there will be problems that threaten the family.”
The report stated, “It is necessary to clarify that
according to Principle 20 of the Iranian Constitution, all members of the nation,
men and women, shall enjoy equal protection of the law and shall enjoy all
human, political, economic, social and cultural rights in accordance with Islamic
principles.” However, this is not applied on the ground in actuality.
On the other hand, Soltanzadeh stated that “Baha'i citizens
were not allowed to enter the university this year,” adding, “Statistics
indicate that at least 15 of these people received a letter stating that there
was a ‘shortage in the file’, and this message was issued due to lack of filling
in the religion field on the entrance examination application form. The
entrance examination form includes names of different religions other than the
Baha'i Faith, and Baha'i citizens avoid filling out other options because there
is no name for their religion.”
According to the report, the issue of depriving Baha'is of
education has been ongoing since the beginning of the Iranian Revolution in 1979.
“Over the past four decades, the government has made every effort to deny
Baha'is this basic right, while Article 30 of the Iranian constitution affirms
that the government is obligated to provide free education and training tools
for the entire nation until the end of secondary school, and the expansion of
higher education facilities free of charge to the extent that the state is
self-sufficient,” the report noted. Thus, in the twenty-first century, the
mullahs are continuing to deny education to women and the Baha'i minority.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


